Former British prime minister Gordon Brown is poised to announce that he will quit as an MP at the next election after 32 years in the House of Commons, media reports said today.
The 63-year-old Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath MP will announce his decision "within days", an ally told the Sunday Mirror.
There has been no official confirmation but senior Labour figures have said they expect him to stand down before Christmas.
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Brown, who recently played a leading role in the campaign against Scottish independence, has served nearly 32 years as a Labour MP.
Brown was prime minister from 2007 to 2010, when Labour was defeated, recording its worst general election result since 1983. Brown had visited India in January 2008.
Following the defeat, he initially kept a low profile at Westminster, making limited appearances in Parliament.
But his reputation and passion for politics recovered during the Scottish referendum campaign, when he argued against independence but in favour of greater devolution.
Brown's friends made clear his intention to leave frontline politics when he ruled out contesting the leadership of the Scottish Labour party last month.
He is not expected to seek a seat in the House of Lords and is likely to continue in his role as a UN Special Envoy for Global Education, the BBC reported.
With Labour facing a strong challenge from the SNP at the next election in May, Brown's seat - with a Labour majority of nearly 30,000 - is likely to be coveted by potential successors, it said.